Monday, November 1, 2010

Is the Word really alive?

Recently, I have had the pleasure of making the acquaintance of a trained protestant theologian. He is a man who loves God, and has chosen a lifestyle of service to Him. I respect his dedication to the Lord, and I honor his chosen profession. As we've shared our views on God and His Word, I've noticed that there seems to be two different ways of considering the Bible - even among believers. I used to be someone who considered a great deal of the written Word to be historical, and not relevant to today's world. Of course I would never have admitted this, even to myself - but nevertheless...

Here's an example of my double-mindedness. It's very easy for someone like me who grew up in a pew to deduce that the Holy Spirit has largely fled the planet, being that evidence of Him has been limited for the last several hundred years. When Jesus was here, He did 3 things in His ministry - He healed the sick, delivered those in bondage, and taught about the Kingdom of God. The disciples did these things with Him present - and then when He went to be with the Father and sent us His Holy Spirit at Pentecost, the disciples and apostles continued to operate in Jesus power and authority by His Holy Spirit. Eventually, these miracles/signs/wonders stopped, at least on the scale they'd been occurring. But.. is this because God changed His course, or because we did?

I used to credit God with having withdrawn His Holy Spirit and the power that the Holy Spirit has to heal, deliver, and work miracles. I guess like many others, I needed an excuse to justify why we weren't doing them. But He didn't change His purpose with us -- we did. We got into religion, and building churches, and dickering over doctrinal disputes, and we forgot what the early Church knew and lived by. I don't credit this to God anymore, because it's not his doing. It was ours.

Many of us are ferocious when it comes to defending the present-day relevancy of our US Constitution. We call it a 'Living Document" and stand fiercely on our rights to bear arms, for instance. We are sold-out to the belief that what was true then is true now, and anybody who wants to lessen the importance of this is unpatriotic, a liberal, and we can see that if we stop viewing the Constitution as a relevant, 'living' document - it loses all of it's power and authority. We do not allow for a "Yeah, but..." attitude with the US Constitution. Why do we allow it with the only truly Living document - the Word of God? Brothers and sisters - where is our loyalty?

We have listened to theologians tell us that things like signs and wonders are not relevant or intended for us today. Since we do not operate in the power of the Holy Spirit, we conclude that this has been God's design, His will, or His doing. But this is not the truth. Jesus said that miracles, signs and wonders will follow those who believe. ("Yeah, but...") Jesus was the One who told us what to do and what to expect - look at Mark 16:17-18 for example. Surely, "The Church" has not been operating as Jesus told us to, as He showed us to, and as He has always intended for us to. He is not angry with us - but we must not deny that it is our lack and failing, and not His, that we are not operating the way He demonstrated to us, and the way we should have all along. I repeat - He is not angry with us. But how can we continue to deny the present-day relevancy of the Living Word, especially when we get so livid about a simple Earthly government document being called into question? We get more upset about guns being taken out of our hands than having been denied the real power of the Holy Spirit for the last several hundred years. It is not God who has denied us. It is "the Church", and the doctrine of man. I do not mean to incite anyone - but how can we who claim to believe the Bible is the inspired, Living Word of God honestly stand on a doctrine that indicates that it has changed, or is historical, or irrelavant? Jesus is the Word made flesh. He hasn't changed. Has He?

Are we more concerned with being true-blue US citizens, loyal to the government of the United States, as outlined in the US Constitution than with our loyalty to the Kingdom of God, as outlined in the Bible?

Just my thoughts for the morning.